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Sex-specific foraging behaviour and a field sexing technique for Endangered African penguins

机译:濒临灭绝的非洲企鹅的特定性别觅食行为和田间定性技术

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ABSTRACT: Sexual differences in at-sea behaviour of seabirds often derive from size dimorphism and may lead to both resource partitioning and diverging threats between the sexes. Spheniscids are among the least dimorphic of the seabird families and are the most threatened. In many instances, diet differs between the sexes in penguins, but few studies have compared their foraging behaviour, partly because of the difficulty of identifying sexes in the field. We derived a discriminant function analysis that predicts the sex of African penguins Spheniscus demersus with 90% confidence, using only beak length and depth. We also deployed GPS-time-depth recorders on male and female penguins breeding on 2 of their largest colonies in South Africa over 2 consecutive breeding seasons and compared their at-sea behaviour. Foraging effort (time spent at sea, distance covered) showed greater variance with clutch mass and between years and colonies than between sexes. However, although maximum diving capabilities were similar, males dived deeper and longer on average than females. Females compensated by increasing their diving frequency, which resulted in similar volumes of water being explored, and foraged over larger foraging areas. There was also some spatial separation between sexes, although foraging range overlap differed markedly (35 to 83%) between years and islands, presumably reflecting prey availability and the need to minimise between-sex competition. The results suggest potential niche partitioning between the sexes in African penguins, but could also be a passive consequence of sexual dimorphism driven primarily by sexual selection. Female behaviour may make them more at risk from predation or oiling events, highlighting the possibility of sex-dependent vulnerability in this Endangered species.
机译:摘要:海鸟在海上行为中的性别差异通常源自大小二态性,并可能导致资源分配和两性之间的威胁分化。鞘翅目是海鸟家族中最不常见的物种,也是受威胁最大的物种。在许多情况下,企鹅的性别之间的饮食差异很大,但是很少有研究比较它们的觅食行为,部分原因是在田野中很难识别性别。我们导出了一个判别函数分析,该函数仅使用喙的长度和深度即可预测> 90%的置信度的非洲企鹅[i] Spheniscus demersus 的性别。我们还对连续两个繁殖季节在南非的两个最大殖民地繁殖的雄性和雌性企鹅部署了GPS时间深度记录器,并比较了它们在海上的行为。觅食的努力(在海上度过的时间,经过的距离)显示出离合器质量的差异更大,年份和殖民地之间的差异大于性别之间的差异。但是,尽管最大潜水能力是相似的,但是男性平均潜水的深度和时间要长于女性。雌性通过增加潜水频率来补偿,这导致了类似数量的水被探索,并在较大的觅食区域觅食。男女之间也存在一些空间上的分隔,尽管年和岛屿之间的觅食范围重叠明显不同(35%至83%),这可能反映了猎物的可获得性以及最大限度地减少性竞争的需要。结果表明,非洲企鹅的性别之间可能存在特定的生态位分配,但也可能是主要由性选择引起的性二态性的被动结果。女性的行为可能使它们更容易遭受掠食或加油事件的威胁,突显了该濒危物种中性别依赖性脆弱性的可能性。

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